Plastic and reconstructive surgery
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Dec 2003
Tissue carbon dioxide tension: a putative specific indicator of ischemia in porcine latissimus dorsi flaps.
Free flap surgical procedures are technically challenging, and anastomosis failure may lead to arterial or venous occlusion and flap necrosis. To improve myocutaneous flap survival rates, more reliable methods to detect ischemia are needed. On the basis of theoretical considerations, carbon dioxide tension, reflecting intracellular acidosis, may be suitable indicators of early ischemia. ⋯ The data indicate that tissue carbon dioxide tension can be used to detect anaerobic metabolism, caused by arterial or venous occlusion, in myocutaneous flaps. The correlations between carbon dioxide tension and venoarterial differences in acid-base parameters were excellent. Because carbon dioxide tension can be measured continuously in real time, such measurements are more likely to represent a clinically useful parameter than are venoarterial differences.